Today, I’m taking you on a tour of our production workshop to show you how a component goes through all the checks to become a finished product—we follow the ISO9001 system every step of the way, and each stage has little safeguards to avoid mistakes.
Stop 1: The "Entry Exam" at the Raw Material Warehouse
I’m standing in the raw material receiving area right now. The first thing we do with incoming components is incoming inspection: we test them with equipment and check them manually, no detail slips through. If something’s non-conforming, we either handle it as an emergency (only allowed in special cases) or send it straight back to the supplier. Only components that pass get to enter the warehouse—they’ve earned their "production admission ticket."
Stop 2: The "Dry Run" Before Mass Production
Now we’re at the production preparation area. We don’t start mass production right away—we first do approval of the first finished product. It’s like a test run: if this "sample" is non-conforming, the engineering team fixes the issue right away. Once the first piece meets standards, we start mass production. This step sets the "rules" for all the products that follow.
Stop 3: "Constant Oversight" on the Production Line
The production line is even stricter: In-Process Quality Control (IPQC) monitors every step, stopping issues on the spot. After production, there’s a Final Quality Control (FQC) check. If a problem is found at any stage, QA leads the improvement effort—we never let defective products move to the next step.
Final Stop: The "Final Stamp" Before Shipment
Qualified products get packaged and shipped from here. This process isn’t just about "catching mistakes"—it’s about "preventing mistakes" across every link, from raw materials to finished goods. After all, ISO9001 requires oversight at every stage, so we can deliver reliable products to our customers.
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